I would appreciate all replies of those who can help to untangle the following mess.
My mother and her siblings have always sworn that their great grandmother's name was Sarah Murray. During her second "relationship" she was living with William McCallum as per the 1901 census for Caldewgate. There she was listed as Sarah McCallum and being born in Middlebie, Scotland, and as being 5 years older than William.
The two again appear on the 1891 census on the same street, and she is listed as Sarah McCallum, three years older than William, and both are from Scotland. Now, on the 1881 census, still on the same street, Sarah is listed as Sarah Morrison, from Scotland, and four years older than William.
I can find a Sarah Morrison on the 1851 census for Middlebie, Scotland, but no Sarah Murray, although there are Sarah Murray's in Dumfrieshire in 1851.
So, what are the odds that Sarah Morrison, unmarried on the 1881 census, is the same as the Sarah McCallum, on the 1901 census, from Middlebie? Even though everyone in the family is unrelenting in their stand that her maiden name was Murray.
Here's where it gets even more complicated. Her relationship with William McCallum was supposed to have been her second marriage. She first "married" Henry Clarke and produced at least three sons, one of whom was my great-grandfather. Would she have been married and then gone back to her maiden name and domiciled with William McCallum? There hasn't been any marriage registrations for a Henry Clark(e) and a Sarah (Murray or Morrison) nor for a Sarah and a William McCallum. On top of it all, the marriage certificate for my great grandfather's marriage lists his father (in 1892) as Henry Clarke, but it does not indicate that he is deceased. Remember that Sarah was living with William McCallum as early as 1881.
That is my brick wall. All those who wish to wade into this I thank you. Those who don't I understand.